September 25, 2012

2005: Eagles Overcome Injury to Kicker to Edge Raiders

The health of its placekicker is only occasionally a concern
for a NFL team. On September 25, 2005 it became a major issue for the
Philadelphia Eagles in their game against the Oakland Raiders.

David Akers (pictured above) had been an outstanding placekicker for the
Eagles since joining the club in 1999, first just handling kickoffs and long
field goal attempts, and in 2000 taking the job over completely. From that time
through the 2004 season, he had booted 139 field goals to make him the
franchise’s career leader in that category and his 83.2 percent success rate
put him among the all-time leaders in NFL history up to that point. The
left-footed Akers had been selected to the Pro Bowl on three occasions.

Coming into the Week 3 contest against the Raiders, however,
the star placekicker was having hamstring problems and the Eagles had taken the
precaution of signing PK Todd France to the practice squad. They did not
activate him, however, when Akers appeared to be healthy during pre-game
warmups.

The Eagles, NFC Champions in 2004 and 1-1 thus far in ’05,
had players other than Akers battling injuries. Most significantly, star QB
Donovan McNabb was suffering from chest and groin injuries. And while there had
been off-field controversies in the offseason, Philadelphia, under seventh-year Head Coach
Andy Reid, still had a fundamentally sound team that included RB Brian
Westbrook and flamboyant WR Terrell Owens on offense and a tough defense anchored
by MLB Jeremiah Trotter and FS Brian Dawkins.

As for the visiting Raiders, coached by Norv Turner for the
second year, they were coming off of two straight losing seasons – including a
5-11 record in ’04 – after having been AFC Champions in 2002. Their major
offseason moves were to acquire talented but controversial WR Randy Moss and RB
LaMont Jordan, as well as pass-rushing DE Derrick Burgess, who was signed away
from the Eagles. Still, they were 0-2 after two weeks of play.

There were 67,735 fans in attendance at Philadelphia’s Lincoln Financial Field, and
what they saw initially was not promising. The Eagles kicked off to start the
game, and upon booting the ball Akers crumpled to the ground in obvious pain. Philadelphia was flagged
for being offside and Akers had to kick off again, with the same result –
including an offside penalty on the Eagles. After the placekicker was helped to
the sideline, backup TE and long snapper Mike Bartrum finally got off a
successful kickoff, but it was short and, following a 21-yard return by CB
Chris Carr the Raiders had outstanding field position at the 50 yard line.

It didn’t take long for Oakland to make the most of it. In four
plays, most notably a 36-yard pass completion from QB Kerry Collins to TE
Courtney Anderson, the Raiders scored a touchdown on an eight-yard Collins
throw to Jordan.
Following a three-and-out possession by the Eagles, the Raiders again moved
into scoring position, with the biggest play being a Collins pass to Moss for
22 yards. However, a 49-yard field goal attempt by Sebastian Janikowski hit the
left upright and was unsuccessful.

The teams traded punts, but the Eagles offense finally came
alive as McNabb completed five consecutive passes, including 23 yards to WR
Greg Lewis and 13 yards to Owens. But on a first down play at the Oakland 17, McNabb was
intercepted by DT Warren Sapp to end the threat. The first quarter ended with
the Raiders leading by 7-0.

That was how it remained until midway through the second
quarter when the Eagles, taking over at the Oakland 49 following a punt, drove to a
touchdown on an 18-yard run by Brian Westbrook in six plays. With Akers
unavailable, LB Mark Simoneau came in to attempt the extra point, but the low
kick was blocked (it actually struck one of the Philadelphia linemen) and the visitors
remained in front at 7-6.

Following another Bartrum kickoff, the Raiders proceeded on
a long 10-play drive that covered 51 yards. Janikowski was successful on a
28-yard field goal try with under a minute remaining in the half, and Oakland took a 10-6 lead
into halftime.

The Eagles put together an 11-play, 71-yard scoring drive to
start the third quarter. McNabb (pictured below), who had been clearly struggling with his
injuries in the first half, was in rhythm as he completed seven short passes,
including a four-yard touchdown pass to Owens. Capping things off was Akers
successfully kicking the extra point and the Eagles were in front by 13-10.

Later in the period Philadelphia
put together another scoring possession. Starting deep in their own territory
at the 10 yard line, the Eagles made a big play in a third-and-one situation as
McNabb threw to Westbrook out of the backfield, who proceeded to gain 62 yards
to the Oakland
19. Four plays later, McNabb connected with Westbrook again on a shovel pass
for a five-yard TD and, with Akers again making the extra point, the Eagles
stretched their lead to 20-10 heading into the fourth quarter.

Oakland’s offense, which had
struggled during the third quarter, came alive when, on the first play of the
final period, Collins threw to Anderson for a
32-yard gain to the Philadelphia
16. The Eagles were able to keep the Raiders out of the end zone, however, and
Janikowski kicked a 26-yard field goal to make it a seven-point game.

It seemed as though Philadelphia
might score again when McNabb threw to Westbrook for a 37-yard gain on the
first play after the ensuing kickoff to move the ball into Oakland territory. But the Raiders got a
break when TE L.J. Smith fumbled after catching a 17-yard pass. Safety Derrick
Gibson recovered for Oakland
at his own two and the Raiders proceeded to move the ball effectively down the
field. Collins was successful on seven straight passes, with three of them to
LaMont Jordan
for 33 yards. But the drive stalled at the Philadelphia 19 and Janikowski was wide on a
field goal attempt.

The Eagles were forced to punt following a short series and
the Raiders, taking over at their 35, again moved into scoring territory, this
time converting key third downs along the way. In a third-and-15 situation,
Collins threw to Moss for 31 yards to get into Eagles territory and, facing a
third-and-10 play, he connected with Anderson
for 17. A 27-yard pass to WR Doug Gabriel was good for a touchdown, and
following the extra point, the game was tied at 20-20 with 2:17 showing on the
clock.

Taking over at his 20 following a touchback on the kickoff,
McNabb completed back-to-back throws to Westbrook that totaled 30 yards to get
to midfield. A 13-yard completion to Lewis converted a key third-and-nine
situation. A 10-yard penalty backed the Eagles up, but McNabb went to Owens
twice for 29 yards. After advancing to the five yard line, and with just 12
seconds left on the clock, Akers came out to attempt a 23-yard field goal. It
was successful and he again fell to earth afterward, but there was celebration
as Philadelphia
came away with a 23-20 win.

The Eagles outgained Oakland
(365 yards to 344) and had more first downs (26 to 18). They also turned the
ball over twice, as opposed to no turnovers suffered by the Raiders, but Oakland was penalized 13 times at a cost of 94 yards while
Philadelphia
was flagged on 9 occasions for 70 yards. In addition, while effective through
the air, the Raiders had more rushing attempts (22) than yards (21).

Donovan McNabb completed 30 of 52 passes for 365 yards and
two touchdowns with one intercepted. Brian Westbrook (pictured at right) gained 68 yards on 13
carries that included a TD and also accumulated 140 yards on 6 pass receptions,
including another score. Terrell Owens caught 9 passes for 80 yards and a TD.
Most significantly, David Akers was able to kick two second half extra points
and the game-winning field goal.

For the Raiders, Kerry Collins was successful on 24 of 42
throws for 345 yards with two touchdowns and no interceptions. Courtney
Anderson caught 5 passes for 100 yards and Randy Moss had 5 receptions for 86
yards. LaMont Jordan
was stifled by the Eagles defense, gaining just 19 yards on 16 carries, but he
also pulled in 5 passes for 53 yards and a TD. WR Jerry Porter had 5 catches as
well, for 40 yards.

“You know its going to hurt for one second and then the game
is over,” said David Akers of the climactic field goal. “My whole leg hurts
right now.”

Akers missed the next four games and Todd France filled in,
connecting on six of seven field goal attempts and all five extra points. In 12
games, Akers was successful on 16 of 22 field goals and all 23 of his extra
points. Akers remained with the Eagles for five more seasons and was selected
to the Pro Bowl twice more before moving on to the 49ers and more
record-breaking performances.

The Eagles made it to 3-1 before faltering. Donovan McNabb
was lost for the year after nine games and Terrell Owens was suspended after
seven as injuries and controversy erupted. After reaching the NFC Championship
game in the previous four seasons, and winning in ’04, Philadelphia sank to 6-10 and placed last in
the NFC East. The Raiders failed to improve, ending up at the bottom of the AFC
West with a 4-12 tally.